Chicago Sun-Times

DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

- BY FRANK STEWART

Cy the Cynic says that the most important leg of a threelegge­d chair is the one that is missing. When you must solve a problem in declarer play, the most important piece of informatio­n may be the one you don’t have.

In today’s deal, NorthSouth reached six hearts after both players bid aggressive­ly. When West led the jack of spades, South ruffed, led a diamond to dummy and returned the ten of trumps for a finesse. West’s king won, and East had to get his ace of clubs for down one.

Did South boot the slam? How would you play?

South needed more informatio­n: At the second trick he should lead a club to dummy’s king. When East takes the ace, South can infer that West has the king of trumps. West’s opening lead marks East with the A- Q of spades, and East didn’t open the bidding.

So South should win the club return, go to dummy to lead the queen of trumps ( just in case), but put up his ace when East follows low. South’s luck is in, and the slam comes home. DAILY QUESTION You hold: opens one heart. The next player passes. What do you say?

ANSWER: This decision is close. If you judge that the hand is worth only a single raise, bid two hearts. If you judge it too strong, temporize with a one- spade response. I would raise to ! "hand is stronger: The queen of spades is bolstered by the ace. Bid one spade. East dealer Both sides vulnerable

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